9 February – Montevideo 

Been here a couple of times before – last was about 7 years ago.

Met the walking tour guide at 10am, along with about 30 other people.

He was good and the 2 hour walk was really interesting, covering the sights of the old town. It was quite deserted but the guide said that was because it was Sunday and that the previous night had been a major event in the Carnaval celebrations.

Had not realised the extent of the British influence in the city and that much of the infrastructure was built by U.K. companies in the late 1800’s and early 1900’s.

Uruguay’s colonial history also includes occupations by Brazil, Portugal, Argentina and Britain. Finally, it was the British, who negotiated independence from Argentina and the establishment of the country, in the 1850’s.

The tour ended at the old indoor market. I noticed that several of the group had melted away before “tip time” but most of us stayed and the guide did quite well out of it – I would guess at a few hundred dollars US but well worth it.

From the outside, the market resembled Kirkgate in Leeds but it was packed with restaurants, all selling barbecued meat.

Seems like that is where the population was hiding, as it was crowded. It was also getting livelier outside and the locals must have woken up.

We went into one of the restaurants and fortunately, ordered, what turned out to be, steak and chips, to share. It was very good but quite expensive. Interestingly, rather than taxing tourists, Montevideo gives you a 20% discount, if you pay by foreign debit or credit card – made the price much more reasonable.

Spent the rest of the afternoon walking around the old town.

Lynne’s cold getting worse, so brought some food from the buffet and had an early night.

On our way to Buenos Aires and due to dock tomorrow at 8am.

8 February – At Sea

Everyone on board seems to have a cough or a cold. Mine getting better but it looks like Lynne is starting with one.

Bad day at Trivia but obtuse questions and the return of indiscipline affected our scores. On the question of “which country’s national emblem is the Beaver?”, most of the team said Canada but one, Australian team member insisted that Canada’s was the Maple Leaf and the Beaver was Barbados. In an amazing act of diplomacy and to foster improved Commonwealth relations, we allowed the answer to go forward.

The correct answer was, of course, Canada and  Barbados did not feature on any of the wrong answers, other than ours. I seem to recall that there was an advert of a furry creature in sun glasses and trunks but that was a Chipmunk.

No Trivia for 3 days, so chance to regroup.

Lynne’s cold getting worse, so decided to watch TV tonight.

Made another trip to the gym and my trusty exercise bike.

7 February – At Sea

Still very warm. Took a walk around the deck at about 9am and had to return to the cabin to change my shirt before Trivia.

Performance still not very good but around 500 passengers got on at Rio – 500 also got off – so may have taken on some less intelligent people.

Another Gala Night – Black and White theme, so wearing white boxers and black socks.

Free half glass of warm Prosecco arrived with dinner but no sign of half bottle of fizz, that usually accompanies the start of a new cruise sector.

Heard about an app – Travel Guru – where you can book free walking tours in many cities around the world. “Free” means that you give the guide a tip but no fixed charge. Paid for internet service today, so booked for Montevideo.

Dancing after dinner and quite late to bed.